Summary

Our Score

User Score

Lexmark has a lot of all-in-ones in its stable, but the newly launched X9350 is the best equipped of the lot. Designed to be a top-end home or home-office device, it should be able to handle a wide cross-section of printing tasks.

Liveried in grey and high-gloss ice-white, the machine is a vaguely brutalist presence on the desktop – everything is a round edge slab, like so many rolls of cloth piled one on the other. The top slab is the auto document feeder, which can take up to 50 page documents. Beneath that is the scanner section, a full A4 flatbed. Directly below, you can hinge the whole top unit up to access the twin ink cartridges.

At the base of the machine, another slab sticks out at the front and is a 150-sheet paper cartridge, with sheets feeding to the top of it, once they've been printed. To the right of the output tray are four memory card slots and a PictBridge socket for directly connecting a camera.

A simple, well-designed control panel projects at an angle from the front of the device and includes a 63mm colour LCD panel, a large, four-way button square for menu navigation, a column of function buttons and a numeric keypad. The design of the LCD display is helpful and no-nonsense, definitely more small business than home user.

Installing the twin ink cartridges, one black and the other tri-colour, it's simply a question of clipping them into their holders on the printer carriage and clicking their lids shut. Installation of the device itself is a little more complex and depends on the type of connection you wish to use. As well as USB and Ethernet sockets at the back, there's a Wi-Fi aerial so you can use the device wirelessly.

The wireless connection is the most complex to set up, but is still pretty straightforward, thanks to a good installation routine. For this method you need to have a working wireless network and to connect the X9350 temporarily via a USB cable. Once it knows the name and protocols used by your wireless network, you can disconnect the USB cable and, if necessary, reposition the device.

There's a good suite of application software provided with this all-in-one, including ABBEY FineReader OCR and the Presto PageManager document manager. There's also Lexmark's Productivity Suite, which includes basic photo management and editing.

Print speeds aren’t impressive, with our five-page test taking just under a minute to complete and the text and graphics print taking over two minutes. Just over 2ppm for colour print is slow, less than half Lexmark’s claim.